A union in the US that represents opera performers and staff has launched its own investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Placido Domingo, saying it cannot be sure opera companies will delve into them sufficiently themselves.

A union in the US that represents opera performers and staff has launched its own investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Placido Domingo, saying it cannot be sure opera companies will delve into them sufficiently themselves.

The American Guild of Musical Artists (AGMA) said its investigation was prompted by two Associated Press stories in which multiple women accused the opera star of sexual harassment or other inappropriate conduct.

The union sent an email to its members noting that it had asked companies that employed the 78-year-old singer to fully investigate the allegations, but that the companies “have been unwilling or unable to provide AGMA with sufficient assurances about the scope and timing of their investigations, as well as whether or not the findings will be publicly disclosed or otherwise made available to the union”.

The Los Angeles Opera, where Domingo has served as general director since 2003, has hired outside counsel to conduct an investigation but has declined to disclose any details about how it will be conducted or whether the results will be made public.

The union’s email, sent to members on Friday night, said its investigation will be conducted by criminal defence lawyer J Bruce Maffeo, a former federal prosecutor now with the firm Cozen O’Connor.

It quoted Len Egert, the union’s national executive director, as saying the investigation would not be limited to conduct at a specific company or during a specific time.

Mr Egert said the investigation will “examine the systemic failures within the industry that could have allowed this conduct, if substantiated, to continue unchallenged for decades”.

Domingo’s spokeswoman has called the allegations in the AP’s stories “riddled with inconsistencies” and “in many ways, simply incorrect”, but has offered no specifics.

In the AP’s initial August 13 story, numerous women accused the long-married, Spanish-born star of sexual harassment or inappropriate, sexually charged behaviour and of sometimes damaging their careers if they rejected him.

In a follow-up story published on Thursday, singer Angela Turner Wilson told the AP that Domingo reached into her robe and forcefully grabbed her breast in a make-up room during a 1999 production at the Washington Opera, as the company was then called.

Washington National Opera issued a statement saying it was “disturbed and disheartened” by the new allegations, but did not say whether it planned to investigate them.

Other women came forward to share new stories about encounters with Domingo that they said included unwanted touching, persistent requests for private get-togethers and sudden attempts to kiss them on the lips.

Several backstage employees told the AP they strove to shield young women from the star as administrators allegedly looked the other way.